Quote taken from the Japanese movie "Yuuki" with Kamenashi Kazuya in the lead role.

English:
To comprehend the value of one year, just ask the students who failed their entrance exams.
To comprehend the value of one month, just ask a mother who gave birth to a premature baby.
To comprehend the value of one week, just ask the editor of a weekly newspaper.
To comprehend the value of one hour, just ask the lovers who are waiting to meet.
To comprehend the value of one minute, just ask the people who missed their stop in the train.
To comprehend the value of one second, just ask the person who managed to avoid an accident just in time.
To comprehend the value of one tenth of a second, just ask the person who ended up with a silver medal at the Olympics.
The hands of the clock wil continue ticking. Therefore, treasure every moment you have. And treat today as the utmost gift you'll have.

I like this. I aim to translate it eventually. But I am busy with exams right now and my conlangs are all being overhauled.

Also, the words ȷutto, d’arȷeño, and orloȷı all give me boxes for one of the characters (I see _utto, d'ar_eño, and orlo_ı). What is this character and what sound does it indicate?_________________Bakram uso, mi abila, / del us bakrat, dahud bakrita!

Kiri, Hemicomputer, anyone else:
Can you transcribe/transliterate these as well as translate them?
Do any of the natlangs use any script besides Latin?
Do any of the conlangs have their own "con"script?_________________"We're the healthiest horse in the glue factory" - Erskine Bowles, Co-Chairman of the deficit reduction commission

I don't yet have the vocabulary to do it in Aalmoken, but I'll do it as soon as I get that far._________________Fluent or nearly fluent in: English, German, Japanese
Mildly capable in: Spanish, Russian, French, Chinese

*I decided that aalšiknâk wasn’t the correct word for the orthography after I realized it literally meant, “the act of writing in the script of the mountain and sun.”_________________Fluent or nearly fluent in: English, German, Japanese
Mildly capable in: Spanish, Russian, French, Chinese